Infectious disease Flashcards

1
Q

What is the a) causative agent, b) pathogenesis/life cycle, and c) clinicopathological changes encountered in schistosomiasis in dogs?

A

Graham JVIM 2021
a) Heterobilharzia americana (HA) - trematode parasite. Endemic to the Gulf Coast regions of the USA, also reported in Kansas, North Carolina & Indiana.
b) Exposure when immersed in freshwater lakes or streams harboring lymnaeid snails (intermediate host). Free swimming cercariae emerge from the infected snail, penetrate the dog’s skin, and then migrate hematogenously
to the lungs and liver, where sexual maturation takes place –> adult parasites travel via the portal system to the mesenteric veins to mate –> release fertilized eggs into the mesenteric veins and use proteolytic enzymes to migrate through the intestinal walls –> shed in faeces. Upon contact with fresh water, flagellated miracidia emerge from the eggs and infect the snails –> complete life cycle.
c) CSx - D+ +/- hematochezia, weight loss, hyporexia or anorexia, V+, , lethargy, PUPD. CBC - lymphopenia, eosinophilia, anemia, thrombocytopenia. Biochem - hyperglob (polyclonal gammopathy reported), azotemia, increased liver eyzymes, hyperCa (34-50%).

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2
Q

Ehrlichia canis - name:
- Vector
- Intracellular or extracellular
- Which cells affected
- Bloodwork changes with chronic infection
- Immune cells involved during infection
- Diagnostic methods
- Treatment
- Common co-infections

A
  • Rhipicephalus sanguineus (brown dog tick)
  • Intracellular
  • Monocytes
  • Pancytopenia
  • T lymphocytes (impt for protective immunity during infection) - note immunosuppressive drugs that suppress T Lc
  • Doxycycline 10mg/kg/d x4 wks - clears EC DNA from blood, BM, spleen, liver & lungs; but likely still persistent infection –> recrudescence possible.
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3
Q

Leptospirosis - which serogroups are covered by bivalent (L2) vs quadrivalent (L4) vaccines?

A

L2: Canicola, Icterohaemorrhagiae
L4: L2 + Australis, Grippotyphosa

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4
Q

Echinococcosis
1. Major species?
2. Intermediate & definitive hosts?
3. Main clinical manifestations in small animals & transmission routes?
4. Public health risk?

A
  1. E granulosis, E multilocularis (tapeworms)
  2. Dogs - definitive hosts, people - IH
  3. 2 main forms.
    - Autochthonous cystic echinococcosis - common where dogs access infected livestock offal (sheep). Endemic in Alaska, north-central USA, some western states
    - Alveolar echinococcosis - common where dogs eat rodents (IH). Northern hemisphere. (Also occurs in people, slowly progressive disease, 100% fatality if untreated).
  4. Yes, zoonotic. People become infected by ingesting eggs after handling infected dog faeces, or petting infected dogs with ova on body, or contact with contaminated food/water/soil.
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5
Q

Organism?
Transmission route?
Treatment?
Which test is useful for diagnosis & monitoring tx response?

A

Pythiosis insidosum (dogs)
Ingestion of zoospores in water sources (ponds, wetlands etc.)

Surgical removal of infected tissues
Anti-fungal tx x 3-6mths – itraconazole, terbinafine, IV amp B
(medical manaement alone <10% cured)

ELISA-based anti-P insidiosum antibody assay (serum)

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6
Q

Organism?
Risk factors?
Major virulence factor & role?
Clinical presentations - dogs vs cats?

A

Blastomyces dermatitidis (NB: broad based budding)

Young adult, med to large-breed dogs, dogs involved in outdoor activities, access to water bodies/soil/excavation sites (NB: indoor cats can get it too)

BAD-1 (cell surface glycoprotein) - binds to host cell receptors on macrophages, also helps evasion of host immune response (influences cytokine secretion & impairs complement activation).

Dogs - pulmonary (65-85%) > diffuse lymphadneopathy, cutaneous lesions can be small & variable sized, lameness. GI, neuro uncommon.
Cats - GI & neuro more common. Cutaneous lesions usually large abscesses.

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7
Q

What are the two main pathogenic leptospirosis species?

What antigen is used for serotyping?

A

L interrogans & L kirschneri. (note species NOT serovar)

O antigen.

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8
Q

What type of pathogen is Brucella canis?
What testing is available?
Treatment?

A

G- bacteria.

  • Serology (rapid slide agglutination (RSAT) - good sensitivity >95% but if positive, need to repeat test with 2-mercaptoethanol (2ME) to increase Sp & also confirm with AGID/TAT
  • Agar gel immunodiffusion (AGID)) but can take up to 12 weeks to seroconvert.
  • PCR good Sn & Sp but $$$$.
  • Blood and/or fluid culture options (but zoonotic risk)

Tx
- No abx is 100% effective. Usually enro, rifampicin + doxy combo.
- Castration (NB can still persist in prostate with urine shedding)
- Ideally euth :(

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9
Q

What is the agent that causes Lyme disease?

How is it transmitted?

Name a diagnostic test.

What types of vaccines exist against it?

A

Borrelia bugdorferi sensu lato.

Tick-borne (Ixodes sp.)

Serology - C6 antibody assay (also detects Abt o OspF)

Vaccines include bacterin (lysed spirochetes) or subunit (often OspA & OspC proteins)

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10
Q

Lyme disease (Bb) - describe the roles of its outer surface proteins.

How are these Osps useful for diagnostic, treatment & prevention purposes?

A

OspA - allows spirochete to adhere to tick mid-gut (A for adhere)

OspC - upregulated when tick ingests mammalian blood (OspA is downregulated). OspC binds tick salivary gland protein to evade immune response + binds to mammalian plasminogen & disseminate within host. Acute infection (3 weeks) C for chomp, circumvent & conquer

VlsE lipoprotein - undergoes recombinational shuffling of genetic code to evade host immunity. V for vary

**OspF **- chronic infection. F for forever

Utility:
- SNAP 4dx + quantitative ELISA (C6) - detects Ab against VlsE
- Multiplex fluorescent assay - Ab against OspA, OspC, OspF
- Bb vaccines induce anti-OspA Ab +/- other Osp. So tests to detect C6, VIsE OspC & OspF can differentiate between natural vs. vaccine-induced Ab as these Ab are not in the vaccine.

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11
Q

Name the agent most commonly implicated in:
- SNA Aspergillosis in dogs
- SNA Aspergillosis in cats
- SOA Aspergillosis in cats
- Disseminated Aspergillosis in dogs
- Disseminated Aspergillosis in cats

A
  • SNA: A fumigatus (dogs & cats)
  • SOA: A felis (cats)
  • Disseminated: A terreus (dogs), A fumigatus (cats)
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12
Q

Pneumonyssoides caninum - what is this organism? What clinical signs can this cause?

A

Nasal mite.
URT signs - reverse sneezing.

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13
Q

What agent?
Vector?
Most common hematologic abnormality?
Treatment?

A

Borrelia turicatae & Borrelia hermsii (spirochetes) aka Tick Borne Relapsing Fever.
Vector = Ornithodoros spp. (soft ticks)
Thrombocytopenia
Tetracyclines

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14
Q

Agent?
Mode of transmission?
Other diagnostic methods?
Treatment?

A

Cytauxzoon felis. Schizont in macrophage (rare in blood film but usually find at feathered edge).
Tick borne disease (vector = Amblyomma americanum (Lone Star) tick). Bobcats are reservoir host.
Dx: positive PCR or seeing piroplasm merozoites in RBCs (NB: can be present in clinically silent carrier infections)
Atovaquone & azithromycin (superior to imidocarb)

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15
Q

Causal agent (including stage)?
Vector?
Treatment options (include those from recent literature)?

A

Trypanosoma Cruzi, trypomastigotes (looks like seahorse)
Reduviid (kissing bugs) - Triatoma spp.
No labelled drugs. Current recc - benznidazole, nifurtimox
New drugs - amiodarone & itraconazole (synergistic in disrupting parasite ergosterol synthesis & calcium homeostasis)

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16
Q
  1. What is the life stage of Leishmania in the sandfly vs host?
  2. What is the vector?
  3. Treatments for Leishmaniasis & MOA?
  4. Clinical response
A
  1. Promastigote in the sandfly. Amastigote in the host.
  2. Sandflies
  3. Meglumine antimoniate & allopurinol (meglumine monotherapy rarely effective to clear infection, drug combo is synergistic + reduced risk of drug resistance)
    * Meglumine selectively inhibit the leishmanial enzymes required for glycolytic and fatty acid oxidation.
    * Allopurinol inhibits Leishmania spp activity by limiting available purines in the host that are required for protozoal survival. Allopurinol is taken up by the protozoa and metabolized into a toxic compound (4-amino-pyrazole-pyrimidine), which incorporates into the parasite’s RNA, causing death.
  4. Remission in 65-100%, can take months
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17
Q

What is the case definition of a rabies-positive animal?

A

IFA positive (preferably on CNS tissue) or isolation of rabies in cell culture or a lab animal.

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18
Q

In which of the systemic mycoses is antigen testing NOT recommended?

A

Coccidiodomycosis - poor Sn 20%. Antibody testing (EIA) is sensitive and specific, so preferred.

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19
Q

Features differentiating atypical bacteria (nocardia, mycobact, actinomyces)?

A

Nocardia: acid-fast, filamentous, monomicrobial
Actinomyces: non-AF, filamentous, polymicrobial
Mycobact: AF, intracellular (in Mp/Np), bacilli

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20
Q

What % of dogs infected with Brucella suis remain asymptomatic?

A

40% subclinical

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21
Q

What is a highly sensitive first-line test for diagnosis of Brucella canis in dogs? What additional step in the test assay can be performed to increase specificity? What should you do if you have a positive result for this first-line test?

A

RSAT (rapid slide agglutination test), Sn >95%. Low false neg (ddx abx up to 4-6wks prior, not yet seroconverted ~4-12wks).
False pos due to X-rxn with other G- bact.
If RSAT positive, either:
- Add 2-ME (2-mercaptoethanol) to inhibit IgM X-rxn & increase test specificity.
- Repeat test with AGID or tube agglutination test (TAT)
- Repeat test at 12wks

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22
Q

What drug is used for monotherapy to treat Leishmaniasis & MOA? What stages of disease may monotherapy be considered?

A

Allopurinol. MOA - inhibits protozoal activity by interfering with the purine pathway & protozoal RNA synthesis. Drug uptake by Leish is metabolised into a toxic compound (4-amino-pyrazole-pyrimidine) which incorporates into its RNA & causes death. Given long-term (min 6 months, usually 1 year+)

Stage 1 (mild CSx, normal bloodwork, non-azotemic, non-proteinuric) OR
Stage 4 (stage 3-4 CKD with nephrotic syndrome, UPC >5, PTE) - as antimony drugs are nephrotoxic

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23
Q

Pneumocystis canis:
- Where does its life cycle occur
- Predisposed breeds
- Recc (vs not recc) diagnostics
- Treatments

A

Alveolar epithelial cells (trophozoites > cysts)
Young CKCS, Mini Dach

Histo - see trophozoites within alveolar spaces.
- Giemsa, Wright, methylene blue to see nuclei of trophozoites.
- GMS stains, PAS to see cysts (not trophozoites).
- FU with IHC or PCR for ID.

Antibody - higher Sn than PCR, increased titres for long periods. False - if immunodeficient.
PCR (human assay) - + can occur with subclinical colonisation. False - if don’t detect P. canis
Culture NOT possible

TMPS, folic acid, supportive care. NOT anti-fungals (resistant).

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24
Q

What are the main species & vector(s) causing Bartonellosis in dogs vs cats?
What are the virulence factors of Bartonella?

A

D/C: B. henselae - C felis (fleas)
D: B. vinsonii & rochalimae - Rhipicephalus sanguineus
C: also B. clarridgeae - fleas

Virulence factors - type IV secretory systems (T4SS) (transports protozoal effector proteins to target cells) + adhesions (allows binding to endothelial cells). Inhibit host cell apoptosis which allows continuous replication > reach critical #s in circulation without causing hemolysis but enough to be picked up by arthropod during bite.

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25
Q

What are the clinical manifestations of Bartonellosis? Which ones are most common in dogs vs cats?

A

Dogs: 5 mechanisms. Intravascular infection most common - endocarditis 30% (aortic valve, CHF likely, increased morbidity vs other bact causes), pyrexia, lameness. Also - immune-mediated dz, lymphatic dz > effusions, pyogranulomatous inflammation (visceral organs/disseminated), peliosis hepatis.

Cats: subclinical most common. Gingivitis & lymphadenopathy common if FIV+. Can get uveitis, SQ abscesses, neuro signs, endocarditis rare.

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26
Q

What diagnostic tests have the highest sensitivity for diagnosis of Bartonellosis in dogs?

What tests are poorly specific for Bartonellosis in cats and why?

A

Dogs:
Bartonella enriched culture + PCR (using BAPGM = bartonella alpha proteobacteria growth medium). Thriple blood draw (3 samples over 3 days).
Serology: Ab >1:512 useful for endocarditis but poor Sn for local dz/other body systems.
NB: cats also recc enriched culture + PCR.

Cats:
Serology (Ab) & PCR poor Sp as high prevalence, IgG titres persist for long time, & positive result doesn’t indicate cause of dz.

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27
Q

Treatment options for Bartonellosis in dogs/cats?

A

Dual abx to reduce resistance dvpt. Start 2nd abx 5-7d after 1st abx as endotoxins from rapid bact death can cause SIRS/severe rxn
CNS infx: doxy/azithro + rifampin
Home tx: doxy + enro
Endocarditis: doxy + amikacin (in-hosp)
Generally 4-6 wks, recheck enriched culture + PCR 2-6 weeks after abx stopped. +/- reduction in Ab titres.
Cats: prado + doxy; only tx clinical cats

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27
Q

Treatment options for Bartonellosis in dogs/cats?

A

Dual abx to reduce resistance dvpt. Start 2nd abx 5-7d after 1st abx as endotoxins from rapid bact death can cause SIRS/severe rxn
CNS infx: doxy/azithro + rifampin
Home tx: doxy + enro
Endocarditis: doxy + amikacin (in-hosp)
Generally 4-6 wks, recheck enriched culture + PCR 2-6 weeks after abx stopped. +/- reduction in Ab titres.
Cats: prado + doxy; only tx clinical cats

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28
Q

What diagnostic tests are recommended for diagnosis of Anaplasma phagocytophilum in cats? Discuss limitations.

A

In-house SNAP 4dx Plus or Multi-Analyte (Ab): canine assay. Discordant results between assays.
Blood smear - detect morulae in neutrophils/granulocytes. Disadv: can’t differentiate with E. ewingii, cats have lower #s cf dogs so false negs.
PCR (spleen, blood, buffy coat, BM) - high Sn/Sp in acute infx, but false negs possible in chronic infx.
IFAT or ELISA (Ab titres): increase/decrease Ab titre by 4x within 4wks confirms acute infx.

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29
Q

What infectious agent is the LipL32 protein associated with? What is its diagnostic utility?

A

Leptospirosis. LipL32 protein = membrane protein expressed only by pathogenic leptospires and is conserved across serogroups.
PCR identifies lipL32/hap1 gene. Newer ELISA assays detect LipL32 protein (not commercially available yet)

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30
Q

Which serogroups do the bivalent vs quadrivalent lepto vaccines protect against?

A

Bivalent - Icterohaemorrhagiae, Canicola
Quadrivalent - bivalent + grippotyphosa + australis.

31
Q

What is the incidence of amicrofilariaemic (a-MF) infections in dogs with HWD? What diagnostic tests are used to evaluate microfilaria status in antigen-positive dogs?
What treatment may be considered only for dogs with a-MF infections & what is the main AE?

A

10-20%
Modified Knott’s test, filter test - concentrates MF.
Diethylcarbamazine (anthelmintic): possibly paralyses worm.
- AE: immune mediated rxn in 30% cases if MF present but missed (occurs within 1hr = depression, ptyalism, vomiting, diarrhea, weak pulse, pale MM, poor CRT, bradycardia; can become recumbent, dyspnoeic and tachycardic. Fatal in 18% dogs with ADR.)
- Note drug is not recommended

32
Q

Summarise key findings with different classes of HWD in dogs?

A

Class I - positive Ag, asymptomatic, mild TXR changes.
Class II - positive Ag, moderate dz. Split S2 heart sound. +/- mild-moderate proteinuria. Moderate TXR changes.
Class III - positive Ag, severe dz. R-CHF (ascites). TXR - +/- pleural effusion. Pulmonary hypertension. +/- severe proteinuria.
Class IV - class III + caval syndrome. Intravascular hemolysis & hemoglobinuria (RBC lysis from shearing forces of blood across tricuspid valve),. hepatic & renal failure.

33
Q

Recommended treatments for HW & MOA of drugs?

A

MLs: L3 & L4 larvae. E.g. selamectin, milbemycin, ivermectin. (some have adulticidal activity at high doses).
MOA - increase Cl- channel ions in parasite cell memb to Cl- > inhibit electrical activity of muscle & nerve cells; also increase GABA-receptor activity (inhibitory NTR)

Melarsomine dihydrochloride: L5 & adults.
MOA unknown (arsenical compound).

34
Q

Is anti-thrombotic therapy recommended for dogs with HWD, and if so when?

A

CURATIVE 2022
HWD dogs are considered HIGH risk for thrombosis. Dilofilaria antigen itself is thrombogenic; but presence of worm/worm fragments are associated with persistent thrombosis. Recommended for severe dz & those receiving adulticide tx.
Aspirin/dipyridamole or ticlopidine (P2Y12-R inhibitor)

Note not recommended in AHS guidelines

35
Q

List key differences between cats vs dogs with HWD (in terms of life cycle, pathogenesis, clinical manifestations & treatment).

A

Cats
- More resistant to infx
- Lower worm burden (usually 1-4, <10)
- Commonly no to low MF counts - so MF testing poorly Sn
- Shortened worm lifespan (up to 4yrs)
- Lower % patent infections (<20%), longer pre-patent period (7-8mths post infx)
- 50% cats that reject infx at immature L5 develop respiratory dz (HARDS/pulmonary larval dirofilariasis)
- More severe inflammatory response to less # worms as pulmonary arterial tree is smaller with less collateral circulation.
- Dx: antibody good screening test (high Sn for early infx). Antigen tests high Sp but low Sn (single male infx in 30% cats)
- Tx: adulticide not recommended (no clear benefit & risk of PTE). Use short course pred + monthly preventative to manage respiratory signs

36
Q

Which structure/component of FeLV is detected in routine diagnostic tests?

A

p27 antigen. Viral capsid protein, MW 27kDa.
- POC (SNAP) test, ELISA - detects free circulating p27 Ag. Initial viremia (~1st 3 wks). Good screening test.
- Direct FAT - detects intracellular p27 Ag (after virus infects BM > Ag within platelets & granulocytes). Not as a screening test but used to confirm positive results.

37
Q

What are the 4 classes of FeLV infection and what are expected diagnostic test findings?

A
  1. Abortive - complete virus elimination. Ag -, PCR -, Ab + (variable titres)
  2. Regressive - infection not in BM cells. Still infectious via blood transfusions. Ag -, PCR -, Ab + (high titres)
  3. Latent - infection alr in BM cells. Ag -, PCR +/-
  4. Progressive - poor immunity, high mortality. Ag +, PCR +, Ab -/low lvls
    (Also atypical/localised infx. Test Ag negative but still infectious e.g. mammary glands in lactating queens)
38
Q

Describe the different FeLV subtypes & associated disease manifestations?

A
  • FeLV-A: only subtype that is naturally transmitted (horizontally). Can mutate into other subgroups (B & C have higher pathogenicity).
  • FeLV-B: commonly associated with malignancies esp T-cell mediastinal LSA (also multicentric LSA).
  • FeLV-C: pure red cell aplasia, see macrocytic anemia w/o retics. Receptor interaction blocks the differentiation of erythroid progenitors by interfering with signal transduction pathways essential for erythropoiesis.
  • FeLV-D: unsure if pathogenic or not
  • FeLV feline acquired immunodeficiency syndrome: highly immunopathogenic, infects CD41 & CD81 T Lc & B Lc in blood, LNs, myeloid cells.
39
Q

What are the clinical manifestations of canine parvovirus?

A

In-utero or <8wks exposure:
- Generalised infx > death <2wks old
- Myocarditis (arrhythmias & sudden death or survive but develop chronic myocardial fibrosis, pulm oedema, CHF)

> 8wks exposure: enteritis (SI crypt necrosis, reduced absorption, incr permeability). CNS signs (secondarye.g. neuroglycopenia, sepsis, electrolyte derangements > primary), BM/lymphoid tissue > neutropenia, lymphopenia, GI bact translocation > 2’ infx –> sepsis, SIRS

40
Q

CPV-2 is susceptible to which disinfectant(s)?

A

Sodium hypochlorite (1 part common household bleach to 30 parts water), minimum 10 mins exposure.
NOT inactivated by most disinfectants/detergents.

41
Q

What is the causal agent for feline panleukopenia, and its characteristics?

A

Carnivore protoparvovirus 1 or FPV. SS DNA, non-enveloped virus.

42
Q

What % paroviral infection in cats are due to FPV vs CPV variants?

Can FPV affect dogs, and why/why not?

A

90-95% FPV, 5-10% CPV variants

No. FPV can replicate in lymphoid tissues of dogs (thymus & BM) but cannot bind to the canine transferrin receptor (TfR), which is critical for efficient infection, so onward transmission of infection does not occur.

43
Q

Diagnostic tests for cryptosporidium parvum?
Treatment?

A

Fluorescein-labeled monoclonal antibody staining of faecal smear
ZN/acid-fast staining of faecal smear - oocysts stain pink
Faecal PCR
Faecal float/smear not useful as oocysts are too small & hard to see even at 100x
ELISA Ab not useful (positive in most animals)
Tx tylosin or azithromycin - but no tx stops oocyst shedding

44
Q

Sample of faecal smear. Organism? Treatment?

A

Cystoisospora spp (Coccidiosis)
Tx TMPS, toltrazuril/ponazuril (coccidiocidal)

45
Q

What are risk factors for fungal rhinosinusitis in cats? (Key differences vs dogs)?

What are the 2 main disease forms & causal agents?

A

Brachycephalics (Persians, Himalayans etc.), usually immunocompetent (dogs immunodeficient), fungal virulence factors (gliotoxin etc.)

Sinonasal aspergillosis (SNA) - A. Fumigatus, Niger. Usually non-invasive.
Sinoorbital aspergillosis (SOA) - A. felis > udagawae. Always invasive.

46
Q

What treatments are recommended for feline sinonasal aspergillosis (SNA) vs sinoorbital aspergillosis (SOA)?

A

SNA - similar to dogs.
- Topical anti-fungal nasal soak (don’t use creams). 1% clotrimazole or enilconazole (polyethylene not propylene glycol)
- + systemic antifungal if extra-nasal involvement (ITZ preferred to KTZ).
- Refractory cases - sinusotomy to remove fungal balls or mycetomas and provide drainage. Px fair.

SOA
- Posaconazole empirically until fungal C&S results available - well tolerated.
- Voriconazole only last resort (neuro signs, long T 1/2 43hrs so accumulates).
- Not ITZ (poor susceptibility)
- Combo caspofungin + posa + terbinafine successful in some cases. But overall px guarded.

47
Q

Which mycosis is strongly associated with ventriculitis in dogs? What are the hallmark characteristics of this disease warrant prompt treatment?

A

VCNA review
Blastomyces dermatitidis (atypical for crypto, cladophilophora bantiana presents as brain granulomas w/o extraneural lesions).

Hallmark = obstructive hydrocephalus & rapid neuro decline (hematogenous infection into CSF most likely). Tx involves treating increased ICP (placement of temporary ventriculosubcutaneous shunt to shunt lateral ventricles).

48
Q

What are the differences in clinical presentation between cats & dogs with cryptococcosis?

Which are the common neurological lesions & clinical manifestations observed with CNS cryptococcosis in cats vs dogs?

A

VCNA review
Cats - crypto overall more common. Nasal > cutaneous > ocular.
Dogs - CNS > ocular&raquo_space; nasal.

Overall forebrain or multifocal lesions. CSx seizures, central vestibular syndrome.
Dogs - multifocal esp forebrain, cerebellum & cervical SC. Ill-defined lesions, occ diffuse meningeal enhancement was the only finding.
Cats - multifocal or solitary brain lesions (cerebrum, thalamus,
cerebellum, midbrain, or optic chiasm).

49
Q

Detection of antibodies against which alternative Blastomyces antigen showed good Sn/Sp for diagnosis of coccidioidomycosis in dogs?

A

VCNA review
Recombinant BAD-1 (Blastomyces adhesin-1 repeat antigen). Sp 88%.

50
Q

Which antifungals should be used to treat CNS mycosis, and which to avoid?

A

Azoles that cross BBB - fluconazole, posaconazole, voriconazole (latter is neurotoxic to catsso avoid).
Avoid keto & itra (for extraneural tissues).

Lipospomal amp B has improved CNS penetration & reduced nephrotoxicity.

51
Q

Diagnostic tests for Lyme disease
- Which are recommended (and target what)
- Which are NOT recommended

A
  1. **Serology (Ab) - C6 ELISA **- detects VlsE (E for ELISA), doesn’t X-react with vax (anti-OspA Ab). False - rare. False + possible (low prevalence area)
    - SNAP in-house –> if positive FU with quantitative C6
  2. Serology (Ab) - Multiplex fluorescent bead assay - detects OspA (expressed in tick not host, vax), OspC (acute infx 3wks-3mths), OspF (chronic infx 5wks+). Titres NOT reflective of clinical dz severity
  3. PCR (synovial fluid best): detects DNA. Fast but low Sn.
  4. Histo (renal bx): if clinically indicated. Proteinuria rare (<2% Bb dogs) so ID doesn’t prove causation. May see IgM, IgG, C3. Need EM/immunostaining.

NOT recommended:
- Serology with whole cell IFA (detects OspA so X-reacts with vax, inflammatory dz)
- Culture (skin bx near tick bite site or synovial fluid): low Sn, special media, slow (few weeks), positive result x indicate causation
- Paired serology (don’t get acute illness –> chronic persistent infx)

52
Q

Lyme disease - treatments & prevention?

A

Abx: doxy 1st-line (4wks arthritis, 1-3mths+? with glomerular dz). Young animals - penicillin (amoxicilin), cefovecin
Tx PLN if present (immunosuppressants, ACEI/ARB), anti-thrombotics, anti-hypertensives
Prevention - tick prevention, avoid tick areas, vax (unknown benefit/harmful) - anti-OspA +/- OspC (vax containing anti-OspC can eliminate Bb during transmission/early infx)

53
Q

Lyme disease & tick-borne relapsing fever (TBRF) spirochetes are gram ….. bacteria that possess an inner & outer membrane but unlike other gram….. bacteria, lack ……. in their membranes which is replaced by ………

A

Gram-negative
Lipopolysaccharide
Outer surface proteins (Osps) - OspA, C, F

54
Q

Treatment for Tritrichomonas foetus? MOA and AE?

A

Ronidazole.
Converted by hydrogenosomes into polar autotoxic anion radicals (hydrogenosomes = primitive organelles that enable anaerobic metabolism, similar to mitochondria)
AE: neurotox (tremors, lethargy, anorexia, ataxia, nystagmus, seizures, or behavior changes/agitation)

55
Q

Coccidioidomycosis - differences in clinical presentation between dogs & cats?

A

Dogs - pyrexia, bone (osteomyelitis), pulmonary, skin (ulcerated lesions/SQ masses), CNS signs (ME), pericardium (RHF), uveitis. 60% proteinuria. Can be subclinical (endemic areas)
Cats - >50% skin, 31% pyrexia, 25% respiratory. Uncommon for bone/ocular/CNS signs.

56
Q

xx Infectious causes of IM glomerulonephropathy?

A

Fungal - coccidioiodomycosis

57
Q

Which tests are recommended for diagnosis of coccidioidomycosis?

A

Recommended:
Serology (Serum/CSF): AGID - IgM (2-5wks) or IgM (8-12wks): ~100% Sn. Quantiative IgG available. Titres ~1:2 to 1:256. Useful for monitoring tx response. High titres (1:16) in endemic areas possible in subclinical/recovered dogs.
- Cats: IgG (complemen fixation test) high Sn.

Histo - low Sn (need multiple bx), usually see 1-2 spherules only
Culture - Sn/Sp but slow (few wks), lab hazard. False neg if low #s.
Antigen - low Sn. False + with histo/blasto. NOT recommended.
PCR - not available

58
Q

Treatment & monitoring recommendations for coccidioidomycosis?

A

Azole + amp B combo
Localised pulmonary - best px. itraconazole monotherapy can have good response.
Osteomyelitis - itraconazole
CNS - fluconazole or voriconazole (refractory cases, $$)
Supportive tx (O2, thoracocentesis if effusions, amputation if peristent osteomyelitis)

Tx duration min 6mths, can be lifelong.
IgG titres decrease with successful treatment, which should be continued until lesions resolve and titer </= 1:2

59
Q

Which tests are recommended (vs not recommended) for diagnosis of blastomycosis?

A

Blastomyces cell wall galactomannan antigen assay: high Sn (urine 94% vs serum 87%). False+ with X-reactivity (histoplasma). Useful for monitoring tx response (aim <1ng/mL or negative).

Cytology - Sn 81% on lung FNA, also good for skin lesions & LNs. Lower in TTW/BAL/other body fluids. May be useful
Histo - broad based budding yeasts, need special stains. Sn but hard to find yeasts.

NOT recc:
Culture - slow 1-5wks.
Antibody - low Sn, false + with exposure/reactivity/XR.
PCR - not validated

60
Q

Differences in clinical presentation between dogs & cats with blastomycosis?

A

Dogs - pyrexia, lymphadenopathy, respiratory, skin lesions (ulcerated/ draining nodules/plaques), ocular (uveitis), paronychia, lameness&raquo_space;> neuro (5-6%)/GI
Cats - GI, neuro, skin lesions (large abscess > common)

61
Q

Compare clinical manifestations of histoplasmosis between cats & dogs?

A

Cats slightly more susceptible vs dogs.
Cats:
- Common - respiratory 40%, ocular, skeletal 20% (osteomyelitis, pathological fx).
- Uncommon: GIT
- Predilection sites: Lungs, liver, LNs, BM, eyes

Dogs:
- Common - GIT (colon irregular/ulcerated like HUC), mucosal pallor, pyrexia, wt loss.
- Uncommon - respiratory, skeletal, neuro.
- Predilection sites: GIT, LNs, liver, spleen, lungs

62
Q

State if intracellular/extracellular, encapsulated or not for the following mycoses:
- Coccidioiodomycosis
- Cryptococcus
- Blastomycosis
- Histoplasma
- Sporothrix schenckii

A

Extracellular:
- Coccidioiodomycosis (spherules containing bright red endospores with PAS)
- Cryptococcus (unstained capsule with India ink, thin bud)
- Blastomycosis (thick double-contoured wall, visible with routine stains, broad based bud)

Intracellular:
(Both organisms below are similar size 3-4um but different shape)
- Histoplasma (no capsule, MN phagocytes, basophilic center with lighter body)
- Sporothrix schenckii (no capsule, MN phagocytes, cigar shaped)

63
Q

Recommended vs not recommended tests for diagnosis of histoplasmosis?

A

Antigen (ELISA): Sn/Sp with urine (> serum).
- False + when XR with blasto (shares same antigen cell wall galactomannan).
- Monitor q3mths while on tx to monitor response + relapse.

Cyto - highest yield in BMA, FNA spleen (cats); rectal scrapes/bx, BMA (dogs).
- Can be present in large #s within MN phagocytes & granulocytes (main ddx leish, sporothrix). False - with chronic infx.

Histo - low Sn, hard to find yeasts esp in chronic infx. Use special stains

Not recc:
- Culture: Sn/Sp but slow up to 6 wks. Consider if chronic infx when cyto -
- Antibody: low Sn, + with exposure.
- PCR: not validated

64
Q

Which test(s) is/are recommended to differentiate between pythiosis, lagendiosis & zygomycosis in dogs/cats?

A

Fungal culture = only method to differentiate (Pythiosis doesn’t grow well on culture, lagendiosis grows in 1-2d)
Look similar on cyto (septate/non-septate hyphae), but zygomycosis has eosinophilic sleeve surrounding. Histo similar.

Ab ELISA
- Pythiosis - allows early dx; titres decrease with successful tx.
- Lagendiosis - less Sp (XR)

PCR not available.

65
Q

Recommended diagnostics for protothecosis?

A

UA/sediment + urine culture: >50% dogs shed algae
Cytology - usually high #s (FNA tissues > aqueous humor, CSF or urine)
Histopath - high Sn as usually high #s. PAS, GMS.
Culture - growth within 3d on routine media.

NOT:
PCR - not available
Ag - not available

66
Q

Recommended diagnostics for sporotrichosis in dogs/cats?

A

Cats generally higher diagnostic yield (also more susceptible)
Cytology - ulcerative skin lesions/nodules, bx. High Sn 80% in cats, lower in dogs
Culture - o Sn >75% in dogs & cats, culture swabs of biopsies NOT exudates (false -). 5-7d, can be weeks.
Histo - I/C + E/C yeasts in >60% cats (<20% dogs). PAS & GMS +/- IHC increases detection rate/Sn to 80%

NOT recc:
- ELISA antibody: not widely available
- Antigen: no assay available
- PCR: not really used in vet med

67
Q

Treatment options & prognosis for sporothricosis?

A

Itraconazole 1st line (fluconazole < active, not keto)
Amp B if refractory to ITZ, risk nephrotox
Localised hyperthermia (cutaneous dz only), sx, cryotherapy
Supersaturated K or NaI - 40% GI signs, risk thyroid dysfunction, not really used.
Terbinafine

Good prognosis >70% cure (cats), spontaneous regression possible (esp dogs). Tx duration 4-6mths (can be 1yr+), stop 1 mth after lesions resolve. Neg px factors - respiratory dz.

68
Q

Which organisms are acid-fast staining?

A

Nocardia (filamentous) & myobacteria (G+ rods)

Actinomyces is non-AF (+/- sulfur granules)

Cryptosporidium oocysts stain pink on AF

69
Q

Which 2 agents cause canine hepatozoonosis? Compare/contrast:
- Vector & geographic distribution
- Pathogenesis
- Clinical presentation
- Diagnosis
- Treatment
- Prognosis

A

H. americanum
- US (Gulf coast)
- Amblyomma americanum
- Usually severe dz
- Muscle lesions (onion cysts - meronts + pyogranulomas), peripheral blood rare (gamonts),
- Clin path: marked leukocytosis, myositis (high CK) - muscle atrophy/pain, periosteal bone dz (high ALKP, lameness), ocular dc, low BG.
- Dx: muscles bx/histo, PCR high Sn/Sp, cyto (blood smear) poor Sn, not Ab
- Tx TMPS + pyrimethamine + clinda x14d. Good response but dz relapse. Decoquinate x2yrs - reduce dz relapse + prolong survival. + NSAIDs initially for anti-inflam. NOT steroids.

Both - ingestion of ticks, transplacental (+/- for H americanum)

H. canis
- Asia, Europe, Africa > US
- Rhiphicephalus sanguineus
- Subclinical/mild dz > severe unless immunocompromised.
- Anemia, lethargy, leukocytosis rare unless high burden, fever, wt loss
- Dx: cyto (blood smear) more Sn (1-5% parasitemia, can be 100% if high burden), spleen/BM/LNs (wheel-spoked meronts)
- Tx imidiocarb + doxy x14d. Good response.
- Px poor if high parasite burden, good if low

70
Q

Neosporosis
- Clinical manifesations in puppies vs adults?
- Dx
- Tx?

A

Transplacental infection: myositis & polyradiculoneuritis (start from LS spinal n roots) > ascending paralysis, muscle atrophy, fibrous muscle contracture with arthrogryposis, HL hyperextension, loss of patellar reflexes. +/- megaO, chorioretinitis.

Adults (ingestion of infected placenta/aborted cattle foetus): polymy¬ositis and/or meningoencephalomyelitis, predilection for cerebellum (atrophy), +/- disseminated infx

Dx: IFA/ELISA Ab (>1:800 dx or 4-fold incr over 2wks). Histo muscle/tissue (bradyzoites+ inflam/necrosis). Faecal float/PCR poor Sn (oocysts/DNA).
Cyto - poor Sn except skin (tachyzoites).

Tx: Clindamycin x 4wks (may need 8wks+). Alone or combo with pyrethamine (folic acid antagonist) or TMPS.
2nd option - ponazuril x4wks
+/- low dose GCS, physio for pups

71
Q

Recommended treatment for mycobacterial infections?

A

Initial 2 mths with combo (rifampin, FQ, clarithromycin), followed by 4-6mths of FQ + macrolide (usually stop rifampin due to AE - GI, hepatotox, monitor LE)

Sx debulking for granulomatous panniculitis

72
Q

What is the main clinical manifestation of M. tuberculosis in dogs/cats?
Is this zoonotic?
Rapid or slow growing?
Dx?

A

Dogs (not in cats).
Pulmonary - pneumonia, tracheobronchial lymphadenopathy. (rarely dissemination to CNS, liver, kidney)
Yes, reverse zoonosis (humans > dogs, not reported vice versa).
Slow.

Dx:
PCR - rapid, false + (lab contamination), false - (low #s)
Culture (slow but can perform susceptibility testing)
AF-stain: not Sn
g-IFN response assay: detects CMI to mycobact Ag. Not yet validated but promising

73
Q

Abx recommendations for nocardiosis?

A

TMPS 1st line
Amoxicillin (some isolates susceptible only)
If CNS infx - 3G cephalosporins, carbapenems, or linezolid
Combo amikacin + imipenem effective against all isolates (Sykes)
NOT FQs (high MIC)

74
Q

Which of the following statements regarding virulent-systemic FCV (VS-FCV) are correct?
A: Cats immunized with the parenteral FCV vaccine are less susceptible to severe clinical disease from VS-FCV compared to non-immunized cats.

B: Kittens and debilitated cats are more severely affected compared to adult cats.

C: FCV RNA detection by reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) from oropharyngeal swabs of affected cats can be diagnostic for VS-FCV.

D. Clinical manifestations of VS-FCV infection may include pyrexia, icterus, ulcerative pododermatitis, cutaneous oedema, and haemorrhagic faeces.

A

Ans: D

B wrong - adults more severe dz, high morbidity

C is wrong - although FCV RT-PCR is a sensitive way to document infection by FCV, the PPV of a FCV RT-PCR result is actually very low. But if ID FCV in unusual sites (e.g. liver) - strongly supportive.

75
Q

Faecal Baermann - good for which pathogens?

A

Aelurostrongylus abstrusus
A. vasorum
Crenosoma vulpis